David Raker 01 - Chasing the Dead (15 page)

BOOK: David Raker 01 - Chasing the Dead
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I nodded. ‘Okay. What would it take?’

‘Take?’

‘For you to lose your newly developed conscience.’

I looked at him. He was going to ask for more money. I couldn’t go back – not now – even though I only had a hundred on me. But this was the way to play him. At the end of the day, as Jade had told me, Gerald was just a crook.

He shrugged. ‘Gimme five hundred and we’ll talk.’


Five?

‘You wanna talk, we talk big.’

‘Okay,’ I said. ‘But you give me everything I ask for.’

He nodded. As I stepped towards him, for the first time I could feel the kitchen knife at the back of my trousers. There for emergencies.

‘So, you know Jade?’ I asked him.

‘I know a lotta people.’

‘We’re not dancing any more, Gerald.’

He looked at me. ‘Yeah, I know her.’

‘You provided her and her friends with IDs. I want to know who you spoke to, who came here. Specifically, if you’re sending IDs out, I need to know where they’re going. You tell me that and you get this.’

‘Okay,’ he said eventually.

‘First: did you deal only with Jade?’

‘Mostly her.’

‘What does “mostly” mean?’

‘Her, yeah.’

‘She came to pick up IDs for herself?’

‘No,’ he mumbled. ‘Some others too.’

‘Speak up.’

‘Some others too.’

‘Who else’s?’

‘I don’t know. She never told me. I don’t work for her, or whatever the fuck she’s a part of. I work for
myself
. I’m independent. She just gave me the pictures and the names and addresses and I made them.’

‘Are they the same people every time?’

‘Yeah, mostly.’

‘The same people are getting different IDs every time?’

‘That’s what I said.’

‘You keep a record of the names and addresses they give you?’

He laughed. ‘Oh, yeah. I keep a record of
all
of them, so when the pigs raid me I can make it easy for them. Of course I don’t keep a list of fuckin’ names.’

‘Did Jade ever tell you who she worked for?’

‘No.’

‘She ever mention a guy called Alex?’

‘How the fuck am I supposed to remember? I’ve

‘How many IDs did Jade pick up?’

‘In four
years
?’

‘You’ve been doing this for her for four years?’

‘Yeah.’

‘How many?’

‘Fifty. Maybe more.’

‘When does she come round?’

‘Whenever she needs something.’

‘She doesn’t have particular days?’

‘No.’

‘When was the last time she came around?’

‘I dunno. Week ago maybe.’

I paused, nodded. ‘Okay. You doing IDs for them at the moment?’

‘Yeah.’

‘For when?’

‘Friday.’

‘Day after tomorrow?’

‘That’s Friday, as far as I know,’ he said, smirking.

I could feel the knife against my back again.

‘Is Jade supposed to be picking them up?’

‘Not any more.’

‘You know why?’

He looked at me, shrugged. ‘No. Someone just called this morning.’

‘And said what?’

‘That I’d have a new contact. Some guy called Michael.’

‘No. Just that she wouldn’t be my contact any more.’

‘How many IDs are you doing for this new guy?’

‘Four or five.’

I fished around in my pocket for the photo of Alex and held it up. ‘You recognize him?’

‘I can’t see.’

‘So, take a closer look.’

He shuffled forward and squinted at the photograph. ‘No.’

‘His isn’t one of the IDs you’re doing?’

‘No.’

‘You ever done an ID for him?’

‘Dunno.’

‘Be more specific.’

‘I dunno. Don’t remember if I have or haven’t.’

‘You better not be lying to me, Gerald.’

‘I ain’t lyin’.’

He looked like he was telling the truth. He was staring straight at me, barely flinching as he spoke.

‘How long does it take you to make up these IDs?’

‘Depends.’

‘On what?’

‘On what it is. If it’s a driver’s licence, I can do it in a coupla hours. A passport takes longer. You gotta get the marks right, everything in the right place.’

‘They ever ask for passports?’

‘No.’

‘Do you get anything else for them?’

He shrugged.

He flicked a look at me. ‘Guns.’

I paused. Studied him. ‘You ever post their stuff instead of them coming here?’

‘I can’t tell you where I send them – it changes every time.’

‘I don’t believe you.’

‘I don’t give a shit
what
you believe.’

I took a step forward and pocketed the money. He looked me up and down, then held up both his hands, nodding towards the pocket with the money in it.

‘Okay, okay,’ he said. ‘This new guy wants to use a drop-off. A deposit box. He said he’d be leaving his place at 6 p.m., so he needs them to be there by then.’

‘Where’s the deposit box?’

He got up and walked through to the bedroom. While he was in there, I reached around to the back of my trousers and repositioned the knife so I could get at it more easily.

I waited.

He came back out, a piece of paper in his hands, and held it out to me. I took it without taking my eyes off him, and slid it into my back pocket.

‘You’d better not be messing me around, Gerald.’

‘It’s all there.’

‘It’d better be. If I find you’ve dicked me around, I’ll be back.’

‘Okay, Arnold Schwarzenegger. Gimme my money.’

I held up the banknotes for him to see, then tossed

‘What the
fuck
is this?’

‘Your money.’

‘This ain’t five hundred notes.’

‘You said you’d help me. If I get anything from your information, I’ll send you the rest. If I don’t, you just made a hundred quid for doing nothing.’

‘You little
prick
.’

I yanked out the knife and held it up as he came at me. The tip of the blade stopped an inch from one of his eyes. Along the serrated edge, I could see a strip of his face, his eyes wide, bulging, surprised. My heart was racing, thrashing around inside my chest, but the knife was hardly moving.

‘You just made a hundred quid,’ I said.

Gerald held up both hands and backed away. He’d probably had knives at his throat before. Guns too. It was the kind of business he was in. He probably thought it was the kind of business I was in as well. I edged around to my left, towards the door, and wrapped my fingers around the handle.

‘Thanks for your help,’ I said, and slipped out.

I drove north-east across London, crossing the Thames, and parked half a mile from the church in Redbridge. Then I waited. Evening started to move across the sky at about four-thirty. It worked its way in from the horizon, sucking up the light until all I could see were the stars. I put the heaters on full blast and felt the warm air

I knew I was doing the only thing I could now. There was no returning to the places I once felt safe. They knew where I lived. And they would know where I worked now too.

They knew everything about me.

This was all I had left.

At ten-thirty, I stepped out of the shadows and made my way around to the back of the church. The building was alarmed. I could see a box high up next to the statue of Christ, winking on and off – but there was no alarm on the annexe. They wouldn’t have had the chance to wire it up yet.

There were two locks requiring two different keys, but the wooden door meant that this was only token security. I slid my pocket knife in through the gap between door and frame and started prising at the opening. Some of the door split straight away. I could see the dial box for the keys. More of the door broke off, coming away in cable-thin strips. I kicked them out of the way, and took a quick look around, then started levering some more.

My hands got numb quickly. It was freezing cold; colder than at any point in the past few days. I jemmied the door some more, digging in deeper and deeper each time, fighting the cold as much as the wood. Then, finally, a whole panel came loose in my hands. I threw it to one side and it landed in the snow with a dull thud.

I waved a hand inside the annexe and waited. Ten seconds passed. No alarm. I reached in, flipped the

It was dark inside, but I’d brought a penlight. I went for the desk first. There were three drawers, all locked. I put the penlight between my teeth and dug the knife into the top drawer. It sprang open without too much effort. Inside were a couple of pens, some envelopes and a church newsletter. The second drawer was empty. In the third were four slide files, all empty.

Next to the door were the crates Michael hadn’t unpacked.

I stopped for a moment. Listened. I knew the weather would help me: snow would crunch under foot, so I’d be able to hear any approach. In fact, the night was so still now, the noise would probably carry all the way up from the main road.

Turning back to the first crate, I flipped the top on it. It was a mess, crammed with books, magazines, and folders full of notes and photos. I looked through the photos. Michael was in all of them: with his mum and dad; with what could have been a girlfriend or a sister; with some friends at a twenty-first birthday party. One was taken at a service, him high up in the pulpit, one hand on a Bible.

Below that, half sliding out of an envelope, was another picture.

A boy running around on a patch of grass, chasing a football. Jade had the same one. I flipped it over. Written on the back was exactly the same message: ‘
this is the reason we do it.’

Contact numbers
written on it.

Inside, names were listed alphabetically, every page full of addresses. Most were local – Redbridge, Aldersbrook, Leytonstone, Woodford, Clayhall – but others were further afield, in Manchester and Birmingham. I flicked through the book, stopping briefly under each letter to see whether I recognized any names. I didn’t.

Until I got to Z.

Right at the back of the book I found a name I knew: Zack. I got out my notepad and flipped back through the pages to the names I’d collected from the flat in Brixton:
Paul, Stephen, Zack
.

The listing for him didn’t have a surname, but it did have an address in Bristol – and something else.

A line leading to a second name: Alex.

It took three hours to get to Bristol. By the time I came off the motorway, it was two o’clock in the morning. I needed rest desperately. I drove for a while, heading deeper and deeper into the deserted city, until I found a dark spot next to a railway yard. I backed in, under a bridge, and kept the heat on for an hour. Then, eventually, I turned off the engine, climbed on to the back seat and fell asleep.

I woke suddenly. It was light – almost midday. Fresh snow had fallen, settling beyond the bridge and all around the car. I was freezing cold, disorientated for a moment, as if I’d been pulled too quickly from my sleep. Maybe this was the way it was going to be now: every sleep bookended by the feeling I was being watched.

I got back into the front seat, fired up the engine and moved on.

The address was for a house in St Philips. It was an ugly area and an ugly street, bordered by a wasteland of broken concrete and an imposing Victorian factory building. I did a circuit in the car, up to the main road, back around and then down past the house. The curtains were drawn, and there was no sign of life.

Ten minutes passed.

Another bus pulled up, and then a third. More people got off, all disappearing into houses on the street, or passing the car and moving on somewhere else. When it got quiet again, I fired up the engine and turned up the heaters.

About thirty minutes later, an Astra entered the street from behind me. I watched it approach in the rear-view mirror and then brake, reversing into the space in front of me. It bumped up on to the pavement and then off again, stopping about a foot from the front of my hire car. A woman moved around inside, the hood up on her jacket. She glanced in her rear-view mirror, picked something up, then got out.

Wind carved up the road. Some tendrils of hair that had escaped from her hood whipped around her face. She pushed the door shut with her backside, trying to juggle a shopping bag and her keys. On the keyring I could see a silver crucifix, dangling down, brushing against the side of the door as she turned the lock.

She glanced in my direction. Stopped. Looked away.

I watched her start to pick up the fruit again, quicker this time. Suddenly, she looked nervous, grabbing hold of an apple only to drop it, then doing the same thing a second time. Another apple rolled all the way across the street, then another.

Then, strangely, she straightened and started walking away, leaving the fruit rolling around in the gutter. She didn’t care about it any more, barely had hold of the shopping bag, and was trying to sort through her keys with her spare hand as she walked. More fruit escaped from the bag, tumbling into the road. She didn’t look back. She just carried on, finally stopping when she got to her house.

It was the house I’d been watching.

She put the bag down and started going through the keys properly, one after the other, flipping them until she found the right one. Then she looked in my direction once more. Her head didn’t move. Just her eyes.

She was looking right at me.

Her hair was a different colour, longer and more unruly. Her face was pale and serious. Older. Weathered. And her nose looked different: it was more tapered, thinned out. Before, when I’d seen her working in Angel’s, it had been wider, less shapely. But it was definitely her.

It was Evelyn.

I got out of the car, set the alarm and started towards her. As I got closer, her movements became frantic. She couldn’t unlock the door. From behind me I heard a voice, distant at first, then louder. I looked back and saw a black guy coming towards me, shouting, ‘Oi! You can’t park here!’ I ignored him. When I turned back, Evelyn had opened the door. She left the shopping bag where it was, on the step, and ran inside.

‘Evelyn!’ I called as I got to the door. It was on a slow spring, creaking as it swung back. I stepped inside the house. ‘Evelyn?’

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